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Transgenerational Genetic Effects - a newly discovered mode of inheritanceThe study of epigenetics has undoubtedly emerged as one of the hottest fields of research over the past decade. Interest in epigenetics has arisen as researchers endeavor to reveal the underlying causes of phenotypic variation and common diseases despite technological advances allowing for the characterisation of genetic variants and their heritability. Daughters (XX) do not inherit the Y chromosome and therefore should not share the phenotype of CSS fathers. However results from this study found that although daughters were genetically identical to females from the host strain, their phenotype is attributed to this transgenerational genetic effect. In this first test for the generality of heritable epigenetic changes, the authors found that the frequency and strength of phenotypic effects resulting from transgenerational and conventional inheritance were comparable in frequency and strength, suggesting that this unconventional mode of inheritance rivals conventional genetics in its impact on biological variation and disease risk. ‘‘We found striking evidence for frequent and strong phenotypic changes in daughters that are attributable in a transgenerational genetic manner to the parental Y chromosome'' In addition to phenotype screening, a carefully designed behavioural test strongly suggested that transgenerational rather than social and environmental factors lead to altered behaviour in the daughters from CSS males. ‘‘These results are especially surprising given the relatively small number of genes on the Y chromosome'' Nadeau and his team found themselves asking ‘‘Do other chromosomes lead to transgenerational effects? Do transgenerational effects occur in humans? What is the molecular basis for these effects?'' If genetic variants act across generations, then traits have a genetic basis, however this study found that certain ‘disease genes' can occur in previous generations and not necessarily in the affected individuals. Undeniably these transgenerational effects depend on the interaction between the background and epigenetic factors relating to the Y chromosome. Nadeau and his colleagues state these transgenerational genetic effects contribute to ‘missing heritability' which could persist for generations and that these epigenetic effects can most probably be applied to humans. Thus the attributes of an individual today could depend as much on ancestral parental genetics as on the genetic variants that they inherited. The next major step in the study of transgenerational effects is to unfold the sequence of molecular events that initiate these epigenetic changes which occur in one generation yet subsequently lead to phenotypic changes is following generations. The full article is available at http://www.futuremedicine.com/toc/epi/2/4 |
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